Vivaldi Viola Da Gamba



Vivaldi viola da gambar

Viola Da Gamba Kit

Tenor viola da gamba
  1. Double Concerto ('All'inglese'), for violin, cello, strings & continuo in A major, RV 546
  2. Concerto for 2 violins, cello, strings & continuo in D Minor ('L'estro armonico' No. 11), Op. 3/11, RV 565
  3. Concerto funebre, for violin, oboe, chalumeau, 3 violas all'inglese, strings & continuo in B flat major, RV 579
  4. Double Concerto ('Il Proteo, o sia Il mondo al rovescio'), for violin, cello, strings & continuo in F major, RV 544
  5. Concerto for 2 violins, cello, strings & continuo in G minor ('L'estro armonico' No. 2), Op. 3/2, RV 578
  6. Concerto for 4 violins, cello, strings & continuo in B Minor ('L'estro armonico' No. 10) Op. 3/10, RV 580: Allegro
  7. Concerto for 4 violins, cello, strings & continuo in B Minor ('L'estro armonico' No. 10) Op. 3/10, RV 580: Largo
  8. Concerto for 4 violins, cello, strings & continuo in B Minor ('L'estro armonico' No. 10) Op. 3/10, RV 580: Larghetto (Adagio - Largo)
  9. Concerto for 4 violins, cello, strings & continuo in B Minor ('L'estro armonico' No. 10) Op. 3/10, RV 580: Allegro
  10. Concerto for 3 violins, oboe, viola all'inglese, chalmeleau, 2 cellos, harpsichord, strings & continuo in C, RV 555
Vivaldi Viola Da Gamba

Viola Da Gamba Strings

The viol (/ ˈ v aɪ ə l /), viola da gamba (Italian: ˈvjɔːla da (ɡ)ˈɡamba), or informally gamba, is any one of a family of bowed, fretted and stringed instruments with hollow wooden bodies and pegboxes where the tension on the strings can be increased or decreased to adjust the pitch of each of the strings. Frets on the viol are usually made of gut, tied on the fingerboard around the. In fact, it now seems clear from recent research that the viola da gamba had not entirely disappeared in Italy: Vivaldi was introduced to the viol by his father Giovanni Battista Vivaldi (the latter being employed at the Ospedale dei mendicanti in Venice, which boasted a consort of seven viols).